A science fiction short story about an all-female human colony planet whose inhabitants produce offspring by chemically combining ova because all their males died in a plague 30 generations earlier.
Joanna Russ (February 22, 1937 – April 29, 2011) was an American writer, academic and feminist. She is the author of a number of works of science fiction, fantasy and feminist literary criticism such as How to Suppress Women's Writing, as well as a contemporary novel, On Strike Against God, and one children's book, Kittatinny. She is best known for The Female Man, a novel combining utopian fiction and satire.
When It Changed is a very brief work of science fiction that packs a punch. (seriously, it's only 7 pages long but accomplishes a great deal)
Set on an all-female colony 30 generations after a plague killed off all the men, the main character is a woman in her 30's with a wife and three children. Through small details we learn how this community has created a functioning society, a government, and loving family structures. Teen girls come of age by going into the wilderness and killing a beast, and occupation is not determined by gendered expectations. But men from earth have arrived, with all their misogynist pride. Astonishment that women could do so well on their own, and certainty that said women will celebrate the return of men to their society.
The prose can feel a bit choppy at times, but ultimately this is a very successful short story. Interesting that it was written in the 1970's and still hits so strongly today. Definitely worth a read and makes me want to check out more of this author's work.
What we have here is a very short, short story about an all female colony world. At some point a plague had removed the y-chromosome from their population. Then one day some blokes from Earth arrive and due to problems at home they want to spread their seed a little.
The story is however not the one you're expecting. 'When It Changed' is a little thought experiment, but to me it is more of a character study. How would this situation feel to a person living it out?
I regularly skip authors' notes, but this little story had quite an interesting afterword which I liked almost as much as the story itself.
Anyway I enjoyed it, but it's sooper-dooper short and while very interesting, it's not very compelling, which is something I definitely need for a micro story to have a big impression on me. I liked that the author cared very much about not giving us the expected, typical structure for this kind of imagined world.
Here's a bunch of quotes with the thoughts they triggered when I read them:
"I've seen her [Katy] take the whole car apart and put it together again in a day." - well, speaking from some experience, this seems unlikely, or at least extremely impressive.
"on a country road as bad as only our district can make them" - is this a universal feeling? Do we all think our neighbours' roads are better constructed than our own? I've been living pretty close to a state border for a while now and it has always felt obvious that my neighbouring state takes better care of their roads, but now I'm wondering if this is just a case of the grass always being greener on the other side!
"She has even gone hiking in the forests above the 48th parallel without firearms." - sorry to say it, but this sounds very American. I regularly hike for several days and would never consider a gun necessary. Ok, we don't have bears in Australia, but it is Australia. Ok, the better point is that this story is set on a different planet in a very different universe.
"There are thirty millions of us now." - I guess I was picturing a much smaller population, so this was a pleasant surprise.
"and he walked past Katy's rifle into the square of light coming from the door." - wait a minute, wait just a minute. I thought that Katy never carried a firearm.
It'll take you 15 minutes so I do recommend you check it out.
After 30 generations of female only society, that was the first impression of the sight of men when they returned to the thriving colony of Whileaway. They are obviously of our species but off, indescribably off, and my eyes could not and still cannot quite comprehend the lines of those alien bodies.
A short story, but dense with layers of significance. The world-building feels real, and is revealed casually.
Published in the 1970s, it must have been an eye-opener at the time for a woman to refer to another woman as "my wife."
3.5 hot mechanic hunter dueling lesbians. women's anger. portrayal of women's frustration, rage, and fear in the face of imminent loss of autonomy felt so good & cathartic to read. a similar feeling to stone butch blues tbh. i love u lesbian authors <3
Read this because of a class in college, and it definitely shows some the 60's movement for women's liberation. It was written in 1972, I believe. A short story basically where only women are living on a planet called "Whileaway", male astronauts land on the planet, and assume they are what these woman want. The story epitomizes how these men think they are the best thing to 'save' the women. Women who are not interested in men. Quite chavaunistic these men.
The stories in “Science Fiction: Stories and Contexts” recite the same themes over and over. I’m reading it for a college class and growing tired of the repetition.
I truly adore Joanna Russ and it was wonderful to find myself on Whileaway again. Russ continuous packs a punch and is a fantastic writer. She was keeping it real her whole career.
When It Changed is a short, seven-paged story about a civilization that is comprised entirely of women and what happens when men arrive and take control.
I found this story to be very easy to read, as it read quite modernly although it was written in 1972. I also found the premise to be interesting and engaging, and I loved the sapphic representation! While I am aware that this is a short story, I do wish it was a bit longer even if it was only one or two more, just enough for me to connect with the characters. But, even though it is a short as it is, the theme was still easy to grasp onto. I particularly found it fascinating how the author explores how sapphic couples are treated and stereotyped and accompanies this with more colonialism-type themes.
Read this for my speculative fiction class—feminist utopias are an outdated idea nowadays, but I really enjoyed it. It’s short and cuts to the point—very vivid. A lot of the other stories I was assigned were from a male perspective. It was great to actually read about an all-female utopia from the women’s POV lol. The part where the men were like “Don’t worry baby, you women don’t have to be alone anymore, we’re here now” was the best part. The women don’t care if you’re there or not, bud. 4/5 for enjoyment and amusement.
Lo he leído en formato audiolibro en castellano gracias a Los Cuentos de la Casa de la Bruja. No había leído nada de la autora aunque siempre me ha intrigado mucho su libro "El hombre hembra". Este relato nos sitúa en otro planeta donde los hombres se extinguieron hace seis siglos y las mujeres han creado una nueva sociedad sin presencia ni nostalgia de lo masculino. Pero acaban recibiendo una visita de un planeta vecino que podría cambiarlo todo. La pluma de Russ se hace enrevesada en ocasiones pero no deja indiferente. Seguiré descubriendo a la autora.
It is really depressingly easy to see this happening. A society of women running perfectly fine for 30 generations getting completely interrupted and up-ended because men come back and think they're god's gift. I'd like to think there's a follow up that has the society show these earther men the nearest launchpad and invite them to leave and never come back.
really interesting conversation on gender roles. russ did a really great lecture on women in fiction and women writers and the limitations that comes with both and it really matched up well with this short story.
Everything that came out of those men's mouth made me so uncomfortable...so I have to say, well-written in that aspect for sure. Definitely an intersting topic; could we and would we live in a society without men if reproduction was not a problem?
This was powerful. I wish there was a little more world building. I’d love to know more about the history and culture of the colony and what Earth is really like. But that ending left me with so many thoughts. I really enjoyed this one.
really enjoyable, the reveal comes about quite quickly (pg 3?) and the turn happens with a lot of force (put down for a moment, very emotive). Recommend.
Re-read after discussion with WBT. Still powerful and I prefer the framing being from the women in contrast to Tiptree's Houston, Houston, do you read.
the use of language in this story... so good. conceptually: very 70s feminist movement, but some things still hit h a r d
“Where are all the people?” said that monomaniac. I realized then that he did not mean people, he meant men, and he was giving the word the meaning it had not had on Whileaway for six centuries.